The 20 players will form 10 teams of two players and will compete in three different disciplines. This triathlon will feature three games of Hand and Brain, then also a Blitz round robin and an all-play-all Puzzle Duel (ChessKid's newest feature).
The player list is comprised of 10 FIDE-titled teenagers, most of which played in the ChessKid Games' predecessor, CONIC. Four of the 10 younger qualifiers (aged 10 or under) did so by US Chess rating and then one each from six international partners of ChessKid in these countries: UK, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Australia, and Argentina.
In an interesting twist, the children that won the most games in ChessKid's live server got first "pick" of their titled partner for purposes of making the teams. After the draft, here's the list of the American titled teenagers and their younger partners:
The teams have much at stake. For the "younger" member of the winning team, he/she will win three hours of private lessons from a super-GM to be named later. For the older "teenage" member of the winning team, he will receive the first qualification spot to the Junior Speed Chess Championship in 2020. There are additional cash and coaching prizes to the second and third place teams.
Below is an explanation of the scoring and format:
Scoring and format
One other interesting aspect of the event is that each younger partner is granted two hours of chess lessons with their older partner, paid for by ChessKid.com. Teams may elect to use some or all of those lessons "prepping" for the Hand and Brain section, which is where the duos will act most as a team. Partners will communicate via private Zoom channels that Chess.com/ChessKid staff monitors (players will also be required to have arbiters or proctors present and all games will be checked using Chess.com's fair play systems).
The action is sure to be fast-paced and teams may not even know who is ahead until the final flag falls! You'll want to watch to see the next crop of GMs and perhaps even the crop after them. While this is a serious event, ChessKid is also hoping to put some fun in the game with this non-traditional format.
Tune in to watch commentators IM David Pruess and FM Mike Klein (FunMasterMike) try to keep up with all the action. The event will be on Saturday, June 1 at 8 a.m. Pacific, 11 a.m. Eastern, 16:00 Central Europe and will last about four hours. Catch it all live on either Chess.com/TV or Twitch.tv/Chess.